Three things caused her death, a bad crash, not wearing seatbelts, and paparazzi standing around taking pictures instead of getting help.
Okay, since the whole paparazzi issue was elevated to a whole new level after the princess' death, with the people's main gripe againts the photo boys being that they did not assist her after the crash, I'm going to start off from here and gradually move on to the main issue of media intrusion.
The death of Princess Diana quickly prompted calls for new laws, specifically Good Samaritan laws and restrictions on the activities of celebrity photographers. Both ideas should be rejected.
The paparazzi allegedly photographed Diana instead of helping her in that tunnel along the Seine in Paris. But before sympathy for Diana clouds our judgment, we should recall that the Western philosophy of jurisprudence does not permit the government to impose positive obligations on citizens.
Each person is the owner of his life. As such, he has no positive legal obligations to others that are enforceable by government except those that are voluntarily accepted. All that government can require of you is that you abstain from violating the rights of others by subjecting them to force or fraud. Thus, even if you believe that morality requires you to help an accident victim, that requirement is not enforceable by government. A theory of individual rights could have no other outcome.
people typically help accident victims, not because the law forces them to, but because they are motivated by good will. In a free society, where people do not look to government to take care of them, good will is the exception not the rule. In the early days of the republic, Alexis de Tocqueville visited from France and marveled at how active people were with their neighbors. Americans, Tocqueville said, had associations for every conceivable purpose. No law forced them to participate. They did it because they wanted to be involved with their communities and wanted to have a place to turn when they were in distress. They didn't look to government to do what they thought they should be doing for themselves.
This whole issue arose when certain political and media figures required that new laws should be instated in order to force paparazzis to assist their subjects first before photographing them, thus making a legal case against the ones who refrained from helping Lady D during her accident. The whole argument above proves that we cannot use the law in such a side and misdirecting way in order to negate paparazzis effect on the life of celebrities...
As far as the main intrusion issue, the argument is something in the likes of the one below:
Many people have expressed their feelings for the paparazzi in various ways. Those who claim the paparazzi are stalkers say they have gone too far by trying to get that exclusive shot. It has been said that they "make a career out of pushing their way into other people's lives in a way that makes them repugnant." Such actions have given them the title of "modern-day bounty hunters," carrying cameras instead of guns, who go where the stars are in search of a photo that will sell.
Those who express disgust for the paparazzi have made extensive pleas to the government by lobbying for laws that will make it a misdemeanor to publish photographs taken without permission. Their argument for such laws reflect the ideal of equality, testifying that public figures are human beings also, and they deserve the right to privacy like everyone else. Furthermore, they shout that the paparazzi frequently use illegal actions to gain admission into the private lives of many celebrities. Such violations include breaking and entering, the use of trickery, impersonation, fraud and disguise.
Those who defend the paparazzi say they have a first amendment right to take photos of any celebrity. It lies within that realm of journalism we call "newsgathering," which is protected within the clause of "freedom of the press." But there are some photojournalists who contend that the paparazzi are not real journalists.
"The majority of professional photojournalists,including the ones so called 'paparazzi', are highly educated, not only in the use of a camera, but also in journalism skills. Their training includes classes on communication, law and, most importantly, ethics.... "
In defense of the paparazzi, many journalist figure that celebrities voluntarily surrender their right to privacy as part of an unwritten contract with the members of society who pay their salaries as fans. David Cuthbert, a reporter for The Times-Picayune in New Orleans, said that both celebrities and the paparazzi feed off each other. In other words, one doesn't exist without the other.
"Celebrities preen for photographers only when it suits their purpose. When it does not, they hide their faces, engage in public prowls and haul photojournalists into court. Each needs the other, but it's a love-hate affair, a dance lit by strobe light.
Paparazzo Alan Zanger said that photographers are not at fault, but instead, celebrities invite the paparazzi attention through lavish lifestyles.
"These people earn lots of money. They are very promiscuous with their love affairs. That leads to these pictures being taken," Zanger said. "We don't provoke their affairs. We photograph it."